Orth, J.,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
On 30 March 1977 Paul K. Schmidt, Jr. and Patricia Schmidt, his wife, executed and delivered a mortgage to Beneficial Finance Co. of Frederick, a Delaware corporation qualified to do business in Maryland, and licensed to engage in making loans under the Maryland Consumer Loan Law. The mortgage secured a loan of $3,500 made by Beneficial to the Schmidts. It called for repayment, “together with interest on the unpaid balance thereof at the rate of Eighteen percent (18%) per annum (D/2% per month) ... in 60 successive monthly installments of $88.87 each, commencing one month from the date” thereof. The indebtedness and the manner and terms of payment were further evidenced by and set forth in a promissory note of even date. The mortgage conveyed to Beneficial certain real property of the Schmidts located in Frederick County, Maryland, which was subject to a prior incumbrance and had on it a dwelling designed principally as a residence with accommodations for not more than four families. The Schmidts repaid the loan by 19 May 1977.
A question arose as to the legality of the interest charged. The question was presented for judicial determination upon the' filing of a class action in assumpsit by the Schmidts against Beneficial in the Circuit Court for Frederick County
on 22 February 1978. The Schmidts sought, on behalf of themselves and all other persons so similarly situated, the return of all monies over and above the principal amount of the loan proceeds, damages in the amount of three times the amount of interest and charges collected, attorneys’ fees and costs of suit. Beneficial demurred. The demurrer was sustained without leave to amend. The Schmidts noted an appeal to the Court of Special Appeals. We ordered the issuance of a writ of certiorari before decision by that court.
The Secondary Mortgage Loan Law added new §§ 39-70 to Art. 66 of the Code (1957, 1964 Repl. Vol.). It was enacted, effective 1 January 1968, by Acts 1967, ch. 390, according to its title,
to
generally
provide for the licensing of persons in the business of negotiating secondary mortgage loans, and to
generally
provide for the regulations of such persons and such loans, to give the Banking Commissioner certain duties and powers in the regulation of such persons and such loans, to provide penalties for violations and to
generally
relate to secondary mortgage transactions and the regulation of persons in this business. (Emphasis added).
At the time Beneficial made the loan to the Schmidts, the Maryland Secondary Mortgage Loan Law, with respect to the licensing provisions, was as set out in Maryland Code (1957, 1972 Repl. Vol.) Art. 66, §§ 39-71, and, with respect to credit provisions, was as set out in Code (1975) §§ 12-401 to 12-415 of the Commercial Law Article.
It is manifest that the Schmidt loan was the type of loan subject to regulation under the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law. Although Beneficial was
not licensed under that law,
it was permitted to make a loan under it as exempt from its licensing requirements. § 12-402 (a) .
5Acts 1975, ch. 574, § 1, effective 1 July 1975, rewrote the licensing provisions of the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law prescribed by § 41, Article 66 of the Code (1957, 1972 Repl. Yol.). As rewritten, § 41 has two aspects. It first provides that “[n]o person[
] other than any banking institution, savings bank, or association subject to Article 11 of this Code, any federal savings and loan association, insurance company, State-chartered building and loan association or any other financial institution which is subject to any other law of this State or of the United States regulating the power of such institution to engage in mortgage loan transactions shall make or negotiate, or offer to make or negotiate, any secondary mortgage loan except under the provisions of [the Secondary Mortgage Loan-Licensing Provisions] subtitle.” It then requires, with five express exceptions, any person who makes a secondary mortgage loan to first obtain a license from the Bank Commissioner of Maryland or the deputy bank commissioner. Beneficial was exempt from the licensing requirements under the first exception which designates the same financial institutions excepted from the prohibition in the first aspect. Code (1957, 1972 Repl. Vol., 1978 Cum. Supp.)
Art. 66, § 41 (1). Beneficial expressly declared in its brief and in oral argument before us that it was a financial institution which in fact was subject to a law of this State regulating the power of such institutions to engage in mortgage loan transactions.
Therefore, Beneficial clearly had the authority to make a loan under the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law. § 12-402.
The loan to the Schmidts which Beneficial was authorized to make under the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law was patently “a secondary mortgage loan” within the meaning of that law.
“Secondary mortgage loan” means a loan or deferred purchase price secured in whole or in part by a mortgage, deed of trust, security agreement, or other lien on real property located in the State, which property:
(i) Is subject to the lien of one or more prior encumbrances, except a ground rent or other leasehold interest; and
(ii) Has a dwelling on it designed principally as a residence with accommodations for not more than four families. [§ 12-401 (j) (1).]
The amount of a secondary mortgage loan is qualified only to the extent that it may be “in such an amount that the net proceeds of the loan equal a predetermined sum----” § 12-404 (a) (1).
Beneficial’s exemption from the licensing requirements of the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law also served to make it a “lender” in the contemplation of that law.
“Lender” means:
(1) A licensee; or
(2) A person who makes a secondary mortgage loan but is exempt expressly from the licensing requirements of the Maryland Secondary
Mortgage Loan Law-Licensing Provisions. [§ 12-401 (c).]
As a lender under the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law, Beneficial could not
make or offer to make any secondary mortgage loan except within the terms and conditions authorized by [the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law] subtitle. [§ 12-412.]
Specifically, it was bound by the express proscription that a lender
may not directly or indirectly, contract for, charge, or receive, any interest, discount, fee, fine, commission, brokerage, charge, or other consideration in excess of that permitted by [the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law] subtitle. [§ 12-411.]
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Orth, J.,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
On 30 March 1977 Paul K. Schmidt, Jr. and Patricia Schmidt, his wife, executed and delivered a mortgage to Beneficial Finance Co. of Frederick, a Delaware corporation qualified to do business in Maryland, and licensed to engage in making loans under the Maryland Consumer Loan Law. The mortgage secured a loan of $3,500 made by Beneficial to the Schmidts. It called for repayment, “together with interest on the unpaid balance thereof at the rate of Eighteen percent (18%) per annum (D/2% per month) ... in 60 successive monthly installments of $88.87 each, commencing one month from the date” thereof. The indebtedness and the manner and terms of payment were further evidenced by and set forth in a promissory note of even date. The mortgage conveyed to Beneficial certain real property of the Schmidts located in Frederick County, Maryland, which was subject to a prior incumbrance and had on it a dwelling designed principally as a residence with accommodations for not more than four families. The Schmidts repaid the loan by 19 May 1977.
A question arose as to the legality of the interest charged. The question was presented for judicial determination upon the' filing of a class action in assumpsit by the Schmidts against Beneficial in the Circuit Court for Frederick County
on 22 February 1978. The Schmidts sought, on behalf of themselves and all other persons so similarly situated, the return of all monies over and above the principal amount of the loan proceeds, damages in the amount of three times the amount of interest and charges collected, attorneys’ fees and costs of suit. Beneficial demurred. The demurrer was sustained without leave to amend. The Schmidts noted an appeal to the Court of Special Appeals. We ordered the issuance of a writ of certiorari before decision by that court.
The Secondary Mortgage Loan Law added new §§ 39-70 to Art. 66 of the Code (1957, 1964 Repl. Vol.). It was enacted, effective 1 January 1968, by Acts 1967, ch. 390, according to its title,
to
generally
provide for the licensing of persons in the business of negotiating secondary mortgage loans, and to
generally
provide for the regulations of such persons and such loans, to give the Banking Commissioner certain duties and powers in the regulation of such persons and such loans, to provide penalties for violations and to
generally
relate to secondary mortgage transactions and the regulation of persons in this business. (Emphasis added).
At the time Beneficial made the loan to the Schmidts, the Maryland Secondary Mortgage Loan Law, with respect to the licensing provisions, was as set out in Maryland Code (1957, 1972 Repl. Vol.) Art. 66, §§ 39-71, and, with respect to credit provisions, was as set out in Code (1975) §§ 12-401 to 12-415 of the Commercial Law Article.
It is manifest that the Schmidt loan was the type of loan subject to regulation under the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law. Although Beneficial was
not licensed under that law,
it was permitted to make a loan under it as exempt from its licensing requirements. § 12-402 (a) .
5Acts 1975, ch. 574, § 1, effective 1 July 1975, rewrote the licensing provisions of the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law prescribed by § 41, Article 66 of the Code (1957, 1972 Repl. Yol.). As rewritten, § 41 has two aspects. It first provides that “[n]o person[
] other than any banking institution, savings bank, or association subject to Article 11 of this Code, any federal savings and loan association, insurance company, State-chartered building and loan association or any other financial institution which is subject to any other law of this State or of the United States regulating the power of such institution to engage in mortgage loan transactions shall make or negotiate, or offer to make or negotiate, any secondary mortgage loan except under the provisions of [the Secondary Mortgage Loan-Licensing Provisions] subtitle.” It then requires, with five express exceptions, any person who makes a secondary mortgage loan to first obtain a license from the Bank Commissioner of Maryland or the deputy bank commissioner. Beneficial was exempt from the licensing requirements under the first exception which designates the same financial institutions excepted from the prohibition in the first aspect. Code (1957, 1972 Repl. Vol., 1978 Cum. Supp.)
Art. 66, § 41 (1). Beneficial expressly declared in its brief and in oral argument before us that it was a financial institution which in fact was subject to a law of this State regulating the power of such institutions to engage in mortgage loan transactions.
Therefore, Beneficial clearly had the authority to make a loan under the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law. § 12-402.
The loan to the Schmidts which Beneficial was authorized to make under the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law was patently “a secondary mortgage loan” within the meaning of that law.
“Secondary mortgage loan” means a loan or deferred purchase price secured in whole or in part by a mortgage, deed of trust, security agreement, or other lien on real property located in the State, which property:
(i) Is subject to the lien of one or more prior encumbrances, except a ground rent or other leasehold interest; and
(ii) Has a dwelling on it designed principally as a residence with accommodations for not more than four families. [§ 12-401 (j) (1).]
The amount of a secondary mortgage loan is qualified only to the extent that it may be “in such an amount that the net proceeds of the loan equal a predetermined sum----” § 12-404 (a) (1).
Beneficial’s exemption from the licensing requirements of the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law also served to make it a “lender” in the contemplation of that law.
“Lender” means:
(1) A licensee; or
(2) A person who makes a secondary mortgage loan but is exempt expressly from the licensing requirements of the Maryland Secondary
Mortgage Loan Law-Licensing Provisions. [§ 12-401 (c).]
As a lender under the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law, Beneficial could not
make or offer to make any secondary mortgage loan except within the terms and conditions authorized by [the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law] subtitle. [§ 12-412.]
Specifically, it was bound by the express proscription that a lender
may not directly or indirectly, contract for, charge, or receive, any interest, discount, fee, fine, commission, brokerage, charge, or other consideration in excess of that permitted by [the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law] subtitle. [§ 12-411.]
A lender may “[t]ake interest in advance on the full amount of the loan for the period from the date the loan is made to the date of maturity of the final installment.” § 12-404 (a) (2). But
[t]he total amount of interest may not exceed the amount that would accrue throughout the term of the loan if charged at the rate of 12 percent per annum on the unpaid principal balances outstanding from time to time. [§ 12-404 (b).]
With exceptions not here relevant, a secondary mortgage loan
shall be amortized in equal or substantially equal monthly installments without a balloon payment at maturity____[§ 12-404 (c).]
The mortgage here called for the Schmidts to repay Beneficial a loan in the amount of $3,500 “together with interest on the unpaid balance thereof at the rate of Eighteen percent (18%) per annum (1Mí% per month)... in 60 successive monthly installments of $88.77 each, commencing one month from the date [of the mortgage].” The rate of interest charged was in excess of that permitted to be charged on a secondary mortgage loan and, thus, was in violation of the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law.
Beneficial does not appear to dispute any of this. It recognizes, implicitly at the least, that the loan fell within the definition of a secondary mortgage loan which it was authorized to make, and that the rate of interest exceeded that authorized. But, it urges, the loan was not subject to the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law. In its view, that law did not come into play. Rather, it claims, the loan was governed by the Maryland Consumer Loan Law, Code (1957, 1976 Repl. Vol.) Art. 11, §§ 163-206 (licensing provisions) and Code (1975) §§ 12-301 to 12-316 of the Commercial Law Article (credit provisions). Beneficial’s argument boils down to this. It was a licensee under the Consumer Loan Law. § 12-301 (d). As a licensee, it could engage in the business of making loans thereunder. § 12-302. The loan it made to the Schmidts was in an amount permitted for a consumer loan, that is, not to exceed $3,500. § 12-303. It was not prohibited from taking a mortgage on real property to secure the loan.
Therefore, it
was entitled to charge interest of 18% per annum as within the rate authorized by the Consumer Loan Law. § 12-306 (a). The Secondary Mortgage Loan Law does not expressly except loans meeting the criteria set out in the Consumer Loan Law, but Beneficial would have us read such an exception into the law. The definition of “secondary mortgage loan,” it urges, “can be read to include only loans such as those set forth in the definition which are not otherwise regulated by Maryland Law.” But, we have often said that “[a] court may not insert ... words to make a statute express an intention not evidenced in its original form.”
Police Comm’r v. Dowling,
281 Md. 412, 419, 379 A. 2d 1007 (1977), citing
Harden v. Mass Transit Adm.,
277 Md. 399, 406, 354 A. 2d 817 (1976);
Patapsco Trailer v. Eastern Freight,
271 Md. 558, 563-564, 318 A. 2d 817 (1974);
Giant of Md. v. State’s Attorney,
267 Md. 501, 512, 298 A. 2d 427,
appeal dismissed,
412 U. S. 915 (1973). Furthermore, we observe that the Legislature did expressly spell out an exclusion from secondary mortgage loans relating to loans to corporations. § 12-401 (j) (2) (i). And in 1975 it added a second exclusion with respect to loans for a business purpose or commercial investment. § 12-401 (j) (2) (ii). Had it intended to exclude consumer loans also, it could have easily so provided.
In
Police Comm’r v. Dowling,
281 Md. 412, 379 A. 2d 1007 (1977), Smith, J., speaking for the Court, summarized our many holdings relative to statutory construction.
The cardinal rule of statutory construction is to ascertain and carry out the real legislative intent. In determining that intent the Court considers the
language of an enactment in its natural and ordinary signification----A corollary to this rule is that if there is no ambiguity or obscurity in the language of a statute, there is usually no need to look elsewhere to ascertain the intent of the General Assembly.... Where two statutes deal with the same subject matter ..., they must be construed together if they are not inconsistent with one another. Thus, to the extent possible, full effect should be given to each.... This is true notwithstanding the fact that the statutes may have been enacted at different times with no reference to each other, because in that case the rule is that statutes must be harmonized to the extent possible....
[Id.
at 418-419 (citations omitted).]
We find no ambiguity or obscurity within the confines of the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law with respect to the interest which may be charged on a secondary mortgage loan of regarding the prohibition against charging in excess of that permitted. As we have indicated, the law unequivocally declares that “[t]he total amount of interest may not exceed the amount that would accrue throughout the term of the loan if charged at the rate of 12 percent per annum on the unpaid principal balances outstanding from time to time.” § 12-404 (b). It flatly forbids a lender from charging
any interest
in excess of that amount. § 12-411. It baldly proscribes the making of
any secondary mortgage
loan except within the terms and conditions authorized by it. § 12-412. In the face of this clear language we need look no further to ascertain the legislative intent. The Legislature certainly intended that the terms and conditions of the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law apply to any loan which is made by a lender as defined by the law and which is within the meaning of a secondary mortgage loan.
Beneficial does not suggest that there is any ambiguity within the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law. The ambiguity perceived by it is disharmony between the provisions of that law and the permissive language of § 12-306: “A lender may charge interest on a loan at a rate not exceeding... 18 percent
simple interest per annum.” Disharmony exists only if this section is read as an overriding blanket permission to charge such a rate in all circumstances. In the face of the clear prohibitions of the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law, however, § 12-306 may not be so broadly read.
We think that the loan to the Schmidts was controlled by the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law, and interest charged thereon was legally limited to 12% per annum, as provided in § 12-404. This view gives the greatest possible effect to both the Consumer Loan Law and the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law. An indebtedness meeting the criteria of the Consumer Loan Law is ordinarily governed by that law, but not when the lender secures it by a secondary mortgage as defined by the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law.
Although the main thrust of Beneficial’s argument is directed to the implied exception to the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law which it reads into the statute, it looks also to 59 Opinions of the Attorney General 483 (1974), in which it was concluded that a mortgage on real property could be taken as security for a consumer loan of $2,000 or more at an interest rate of 18% without violating either the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law or statutory provisions regarding interest rates permitted on first mortgages, Code (1957, 1972 Repl. Vol., 1974 Cum. Supp.) Art. 49, § 13 (a).
The Attorney General relied on the law relating to first mortgages and did not affirmatively attempt to reconcile his position with the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law. He also sought support in
Finance
Company,
Inc. v. Catterton,
161 Md. 650, 158 A. 16 (1932). That case concerned whether the Uniform Small Loan Law applied to loans secured by the pledge of real property. Our predecessors held that it did, but on the rationale that the Legislature, in repealing a limitation that small loans could only be secured by chattel mortgages or bills of sale, thereby permitted the law regarding small loans to apply to such loans on real estate, personal property, or both.
Catterton
deals with a different statutory relationship than
the one before us; it is not factually or legally apposite.
Beneficial argues that the Attorney General’s opinion is a contemporaneous construction of the Consumer Loan Law which should not be disregarded except on the most imperative ground. The imperative ground here is that we do not agree with the conclusion reached by the Attorney General. We are not bound by an opinion of the Attorney General, and we do not find his opinion here to be persuasive.
Drug & Chem. Co. v. Claypoole,
165 Md. 250, 257, 166 A. 742 (1933). The rule of contemporaneous construction does not preclude inquiry by the courts into the correctness of the construction.
Bouse v. Hutzler,
180 Md. 682, 687, 26 A. 2d 767 (1942). And, in any event, the rule of contemporaneous construction comes into play only when there is a statutory ambiguity.
Falcone v. Palmer Ford,
242 Md. 487, 494, 219 A. 2d 808 (1966).
See Hunt v. Montgomery County,
248 Md. 403, 414-415, 237 A. 2d 35 (1968). We have found no ambiguity here.
Beneficial suggests that it is exempt from the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law under § 41 of Art. 66. Its notion is that as it is one of the institutions excepted from the prohibition against making secondary mortgage loans, it may, therefore, make such loans without conformance with the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law. Section 41, however, deals only with licensing, and althoúgh Beneficial may make such loans without first obtaining a license thereunder, when it does, it is bound by the provisions of § 12-412 forbidding a lender to make any secondary mortgage loan except within the terms and conditions authorized by the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law.
Consumer loans are under the supervision of the Commissioner of Consumer Credit. § 12-301 (b); Art. 11, § 163
et seq.
Secondary Mortgage Loans are under the supervision of the Bank Commissioner. § 12-401 (b); Art. 66, § 39
et seq.
Beneficial opines that this “leads to an absurd result” because “Consumer Loan Licensees who take secondary mortgages in connection with consumer loans are
thereby required to make such loans in conformity with regulations promulgated by the Banking Commissioner.” It refers to the loan statement from a lender to a borrower required, as to consumer loans by § 12-308, and, as to secondary mortgage loans by regulation .09, ch. 02, subtitle 03, title 09, Code of Maryland Regulations. It declares: "Such regulations [of the Banking Commissioner with respect to secondary mortgage loans] clearly conflict with the provisions of the Consumer Loan Law, and infringe upon the authority of the Commissioner of Consumer Credit to regulate Consumer Loan Licensees.” Beneficial thinks that it is “inconceivable that the legislature could have intended such a collision of regulatory authority without expressly providing a resolution for the conflict.” If there be a conflict, the resolution is obvious — when a secondary mortgage loan is made, the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law and regulations promulgated thereunder prevail.
The short of it is that the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law deals specifically with second mortgages of a carefully defined nature in such a way that there is a clear and manifest intent to limit the Consumer Loan Law with respect to them.
See City of Baltimore v.
Clerk, 270 Md. 316, 319, 311 A. 2d 261 (1973). Simply stated, if a loan within the meaning of a secondary mortgage loan under the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law is made by a lender as defined by that law, the loan is subject to the provisions of the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law. This is so even though the loan might fit into the category of loans which may be made under the Consumer Loan Law and even though the lender also might fall within the meaning of a lender or is a licensee under that law. This is the clear import of the simple, direct, plain and unambiguous language of the Secondary Mortgage Loan Law, leaving no doubt of the legislative intent and purpose.
“[WJhen we consider the propriety of an order sustaining a demurrer to a bill of complaint without leave to amend, we are required to assume, for the purposes of the ruling, the truth of all material and relevant facts that are well pleaded as well as all inferences which can be reasonably drawn from those well pleaded facts.”
Schwartz v. Merchants Mort. Co.,
272 Md. 305, 307-308, 322 A. 2d 544 (1974). The “Bill of Complaint” here alleged that the Schmidts and other known and unknown parties have borrowed money from Beneficial secured by means of second mortgages, that Beneficial was not licensed in Maryland to make second mortgages, that it “did knowingly and willfully charge a rate of interest on said loans that exceeds the amount allowed by law,” and that it “had knowledge of the secondary mortgage law at the time of the securing of said loans.”
In light of our discussion, the allegations of the bill were adequate to state a cause of action. The demurrer should have been overruled.
See Bio-Ramo v. Abrams,
229 Md. 494, 499, 184 A. 2d 831 (1962).
Judgment of the Circuit Court for Frederick County reversed; case remanded for further proceedings; costs to be paid by appellee.